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On 28-Jan-2016 07:11 -0700, Joe Pluta wrote:
And a quick check shows that the new file is indeed not being
journaled
That effect contradicts the messaging. How was the condition of "journaled" verified for MYFILE in NEWLIB; i.e. how\what was the "quick check" performed? Display File Description (DSPFD), or Display Object Description (DSPOBJD), or Work With Journal Attributes (WRKJRNA) + F19=Display Journaled Objects + 1=Files, or a combination?
(nor, at this point, is the old file and while theoretically it may
have been at the time the library was saved, that's very unlikely -
but not impossible).
Best I recall, the logged condition implies that was the case; that the file MYFILE was journaled when saved from OLDLIB. No matter, as the information about the old file was still stored in the journal with a unique identifier. Yet that same identifier was stored with the file saved on the media. When the file gets created [for restore] with that same identifier, thus resulting in the conflict being noted, that the identifier either must be a duplicate or is for a differently named [different library] object that no longer is journaled; AFaIK, the condition would only be detected because the file on media was also identified as /journaled/ and thus implicit journaling to that same journal upon create-file processing should occur.
The message CPF7005 warns that the Journal Identifier (JID) for the file was already present in the existing journal, and while the conflict was insufficient to cause the request to fail, the condition is reported as a /Diagnostic/ message to denote the possible concern for an undesirable effect [such that perhaps the intention was that the file should have had journaling ended, before the file had been saved].
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